Publications by authors named "Kurvers H"

Purpose: To evaluate in-vivo thrombus compressibility in abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) to hopefully shed light on the biomechanical importance of intraluminal thrombus.

Methods: Dynamic electrocardiographically-gated computed tomographic angiography was performed in 17 AAA patients (15 men; mean age 73 years, range 69-76): 11 scheduled for surgical repair and 6 under routine surveillance. The volumes of intraluminal thrombus, the lumen, and the total aneurysm were quantified for each phase of the cardiac cycle.

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Preoperative positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) was performed in 26 consecutive patients considered fit for aneurysm repair. Besides information on aneurysm wall pathology, PET/CT identified 6 patients with concomitant malignancy. As a result of this coincidental finding, the operation was postponed in 2 patients and cancelled in 1.

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Purpose: To study the potential of integrated positron emission tomography and computed tomography (PET/CT) to identify aneurysm wall inflammation.

Methods: The level of F18-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) uptake was studied in aneurysmal and normal-sized aortas of 34 male patients [17 with abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) and 17 age-matched controls] identified in a database of 278 consecutive patients evaluated for staging of primary lung cancer. The maximal standardized uptake value (SUV) was calculated to quantify FDG uptake in the AAA wall.

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Background: In the chronic constriction injury model of rat neuropathic pain, oxidative stress as well as antioxidants superoxide dismutase and reduced glutathione (GSH) are important determinants of neuropathological and behavioral consequences. Studies of the chronic constriction injury model observed (indirect) signs of inflammation. We, therefore, investigated the level of oxidative stress and antioxidant enzymes in skeletal muscle tissue of the rat hind paw and (jugular vein) plasma at d 7 after nerve injury.

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Background And Purpose: Lacunar infarcts usually results from a vasculopathy of the small vessels of the brain. It is not known whether this small-vessel disease is exclusively related to the brain or part of a more systemic small-vessel disease. In this study, patients with a lacunar stroke were investigated for manifestations of extracerebral small and large-vessel disease in comparison with cortical stroke patients.

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Multiple reports have demonstrated an association between Chlamydia pneumoniae (Cpn) and cardiovascular disease. In this study we evaluated the effect of Cpn infections on early lesion progression in C57BL/6J mice. Since plaque formation in these mice does not develop past the initial stage, we thought these mice might be a better model for unravelling the effect of Cpn infection on early lesion type progression.

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Background: Sero-epidemiological and experimental studies suggest that Chlamydia pneumoniae infections play an important role in the development of atherosclerosis. Clinical trials have shown contradictory results regarding the efficacy of antibiotics to prevent atherosclerosis-related complications in patients with coronary artery disease. Our aim was to study the effect of a short course of azithromycin on the incidence of cardiovascular events and peripheral vascular function in patients with stable peripheral arterial disease (PAD).

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Background: To evaluate whether abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) growth in individual patients can be characterized as continuous or discontinuous (staccato).

Study Design: From 1996 to 2002, 609 patients presented with unruptured AAAs. Of these, 278 underwent prompt repair and 331 were observed.

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Purpose: To evaluate the fate of collateral vessels adjacent to and within the target lesion following subintimal angioplasty (SIA).

Methods: Pre and postprocedural angiograms were reviewed for 29 patients undergoing SIA of the lower extremity arteries over a 3-year period. The number of patent collateral vessels View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) for urolithiasis may result in rupture of a coexistent abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA). We report a patient who required ESWL and who had an AAA. Open surgery was precluded by morbid obesity and persisting incisional hernias after mesh repair.

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Objectives: To study whether Chlamydia pneumoniae (Cpn) infection affects atherosclerotic plaque morphology in atherogenic (LDLr/ApoE(-/-)) mice.

Methods: In mice sacrificed 20 or 40 weeks after Cpn infection aortic arch sections were analysed for lesion and fibrous cap area and the presence of matrix metalloproteinases (MMP)-2 and -9.

Results: All infected mice seroconverted, demonstrated Cpn DNA in their aortas on PCR and developed atherosclerotic plaques.

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Objective: The purpose of this study was to investigate whether screening for internal carotid artery stenosis (ICAS) and aneurysm of the abdominal aorta (AAA) is indicated in patients with either manifest atherosclerotic disease or with only risk factors for atherosclerosis.

Study Design: Data were obtained for 2274 patients enrolled in the SMART study, an ongoing single-center, prospective cohort study of patients referred to our vascular center with manifest atherosclerotic disease (peripheral atherosclerotic disease [PAD]; transient ischemic attack [TIA], stroke, or ICAS; AAA; angina pectoris; or myocardial infarction [MI]) or with only risk factors for atherosclerosis (diabetes mellitus, hypertension, hyperlipidemia). The presence of ICAS or AAA was determined with duplex scanning and ultrasonography.

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Chlamydia pneumoniae has been associated with cardiovascular disease and the detection of C. pneumoniae antibodies has subsequently challenged many cardiovascular investigators. The micro-immunofluoresence (MIF) test is considered the gold standard for detection of C.

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Objective: Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory process and is characterised by the presence of T-lymphocytes in the lesions. To study the role of Chlamydophila pneumoniae (C. pneumoniae) in this process and the effect of infection on T-cell influx, we infected Apo E3-Leiden mice with C.

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Background And Purpose: Chlamydia pneumoniae has repeatedly been associated with atherosclerotic disease. Our study was designed to clarify whether this association is based on C pneumoniae-induced transformation of a stable into an unstable atherosclerotic plaque or on stimulation of hypercoagulability leading to increased thrombotic arterial occlusions by C pneumoniae infection. Transcranial Doppler ultrasonographic monitoring of the middle cerebral artery during carotid endarterectomy offers the opportunity to study, before removal of the plaque, atherothrombotic emboli dislodging from an unstable carotid plaque (plaque-related emboli) and emboli related to (excessive) thrombus formation at the endarterectomy site after removal of the plaque and restoration of flow (thrombosis-related emboli).

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Background: The object of this study was to develop an animal model in which changes in microvascular haemodynamics and leucocyte-vessel wall interactions due to acute limb ischaemia-reperfusion (I/R) can be measured in the skin. Furthermore, it was investigated whether these changes are related to local muscle injury.

Methods: Male Lewis rats were subjected to unilateral limb ischaemia for 1 h (n = 8) or 2 h (n = 8) by cuff inflation, or to a sham protocol (n = 6).

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In the chronic constriction injury (CCI) model, signs and symptoms similar to those observed in reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD) can be induced by loosely ligating a rat sciatic nerve. Skin microcirculatory (inflammation-like) disorders may result from release of vasoactive neuropeptides at peripheral endings of antidromically acting nociceptive nerve fibers. These antidromic mechanisms may account for vasodilation and polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) accumulation in the ligated hindpaw.

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Reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD) syndrome has been recognized clinically for many years. It is most often initiated by trauma to a nerve, neural plexus, or soft tissue. Diagnostic criteria are the presence of regional pain and other sensory changes following a noxious event.

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Reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD) is a neuropathic pain condition most often occurring in relation to trauma to, or surgery on, an extremity. It is characterized among other things by motor disturbances such as joint stiffness and tremor. Signs and symptoms can be induced in a rat model through chronic constriction of a sciatic nerve (CCI-model).

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The role of lumbar sympathectomy in the treatment of limb ischemia secondary to arteriosclerosis obliterans has been controversial. Increased temperature and rubor of the skin, which usually follow sympathectomy, have generally been interpreted as indicative of improved nutritive skin blood flow. However, the existence of a (nonnutritive) thermoregulatory level of skin microcirculation makes such an extrapolation questionable.

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Loose ligation of a sciatic nerve in rats (chronic constriction injury; CCI) provokes sensory, autonomic, and motor disturbances like those observed in humans with partial peripheral nerve injury. So far, it is unknown whether these motor disturbances result from (mechanical) allodynia or from damage to the motor neuron. These considerations prompted us to assess, in CCI rats, the density of motor axons in both the ligated sciatic nerve and the ipsilateral femoral nerve.

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Sciatic nerve ligation in rats (chronic constriction injury (CCI)) induces clinical signs and symptoms that mimic human conditions of neuropathic origin, such as reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD). Denervation-induced supersensitivity to (circulating) catecholamines has been implicated in sympathetic dysfunction in the CCI model as well as in RSD. In the present paper we studied functional properties of sympathetic innervation in subcutaneous resistance arteries, isolated from the hind paw of rats 3 weeks after ligation.

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Loose ligation of a rat sciatic nerve (chronic constriction injury (CCI) model) provokes signs and symptoms like those observed in reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD) patients. Primary afferent nociceptive C-fibers seem to be involved in an afferent orthodromic as well as in an efferent antidromic manner. In this study we hypothesize that consequent to development of antidromic impulses in C-nociceptive afferents, neuropeptides released from peripheral endings of these fibers, increase skin blood flow (SBF), vascular permeability, and tissue accumulation of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs).

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Background: Gut injury due to ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) plays a pivotal role in many clinical conditions, such as small bowel transplantation, heart or aortic surgery in adults, and necrotizing enterocolitis in neonates. The influence of ischemic events on microcirculatory mechanisms is not well understood. Therefore, we studied, in vivo, local perfusion and leukocyte-vessel wall interactions before and after different periods of total warm ischemia of the whole gut and subsequent reperfusion in mesenteric microvessels.

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